Is this chart still true? Is college worth it? What's the best careers outside of college?

Is this chart still true? Is college worth it? What's the best careers outside of college?

Attached: 94f7e25d0bc3b2b222fd56a99a52b339ac2e923d27c561c268549e9498fd0eeb.jpg (1069x1107, 149K)

lmao no, stem jobs are over-saturated and loads of companies actually value graduates from liberal arts schools

Also, some shit tier or low tier majors are only so if you are. If you're good at something, you'll make it work

this isn't in terms of career or money making prospects but rather intellectual prospects. Most studying especially stems are due to it being something they want to further advance the study off etc..

Medicine and Chemistry out of God Tier are probably the ones with a lot more career/ money making opportunities.

In terms of employment, openings, competition and money making, security etc.. it would go

>Medicine
>Computer Science
>>Buisness, economics, stats etc..
>Engineering
>Chemistry
>Geology
>Law
>Physics
>Math
>Astronomy
>Pysch
>Pharm
>Kinesiology
>Life Science
>English
>Pol Science

the rest

This is the most current list

Attached: top50combo.png (1272x846, 168K)

This is list is biased and very outdated. Most degrees can get you a decent Job, but 90% of a good Job is marketing yourself through experience, resume, and network.

Degrees alone will not get you "starting 100,000" without the extra circulars to back it up. I know people who make over 100,000 with shitty English majors, but did the extra shit here and there to make themselves more desirable over people with the degrees in the field.

Also don't go to college just for a Job. Pick degrees that allow you to take advantage of opportunities provided at colleges or allowing you to become a more efficient entrepreneur will out do any others.

The only engineer I would recommend is petroleum or chemical, but prepare to actually TRAVEL OUTSIDE THE COUNTRY to make it worth it.

Attached: 1417967268211.jpg (887x900, 232K)

Finance, Law, Medicine and software development.

everything else is obsolete if you want to make money with your degree

Why are dental specialties a lower tier then a general dentist?

greater market demand and rising pay for general dentist

Strange though how dentist isn't even an option in Canada apparently.

Physician Assistant master race reporting in.

I don't even know how dentist is even a thing when the only thing that saved them back in the day was companies started to add dental plans. I don't even know many companies that still do dental. As for why specialties over general is because most people's teeth are in pretty good shape in the US due to the higher hygiene and effectiveness of toothpaste, flossing and/or mouthwash. You're less likely to need a specialty over just your regular check up/cleaning so they would earn more by a bigger more consistent customer base.

Law is shit tier, half the people in the industry are stupid, and the market is overcrowded.

>spend all day on the internet
>using a computer
>talking about magic internet money

>IT and engineering are trash tier
get your priorities straight, faggot.

Well we've still got an aging population and how many 85 year olds have more than a few of their original teeth? I'm sure there are plenty of complicated root canals and other specialty procedures before needing dentures. Not to mention that kids will always need ortho work.

I’m starting my electrical engineering technology degree in sept and the college boast a 100% employment rate for the course with starting wages around 80k I’m in Canada tho.

Don't buy into that unless they have co-ops or internships and if they do get your ass on it. Those along with your degree with pay itself in ten fold and you'll be ahead of the curb for about 90% of others.

Yeh man they have a 5 week work term at the end of the course. It’s mad, the course is at a community college but since my province needs workers they’re pumping millions into these programs and still only 8 people are enrolled and I have too many friends going to uni with no end goal insight.

Go to a trade school and become a specialist in machining or welding if you just want a job that pays well. There is an oversaturation of college graduates and college education has been downgrading just for sake of making numbers look good.

Any pursuit of other knowledge can be done better on one's own time since there are better books and articles out there and you can do your own analysis.

I got my tech diploma from SAIT, i bought into 90% employment meme. Don't delude yourself, just like in any other field it will take a bit of luck and personal charm to get a good employment. Finding a job may be hard, but at least you can choose between office work and field work. There are jobs out there for tech degree holders because you will be a supporting staff for eng's

Architecture: work like a horse and be broke all the time tier.

Attached: 01CAD217-4BE5-4E9E-ACF2-9F026D29A8E7.jpg (800x601, 81K)

good points, but comp. E and EE can work in highly desirable fields like embedded systems and software development. So I don't understand why you would recommend chemical engineering where you sit taking data all day as opposed to EE or even comp. Eng.

My engineering technology course had a 93% employment rate, oil crash happened and it fell to 70%, upon further digging I found that they include any job in the employment stats, in reality only 40% of grads got jobs in the field

This infographic is lame. Pick something and get really fucking good at it. Talent is what improves society, not specific labels

I just checked and now they don't even display the starting wage or employment rate anymore lmao

NAIT grad reporting in